his website is specially dedicated to The Lonely Path of Integrity,
an authorized biography of Spyridon, former Archbishop of America, published
by Exandas Publishers.

Its author, the journalist Justine
Frangouli-Argyris, has drawn on the Archbishop's own notes, archives,
and journal, on interviews with those once close to him, on the Greek and
American Press, and on her own personal work in following events at first-hand
as a news correspondent.

The first part of the book focuses on Spyridon's personality.
As a youth as full of zest and vitality as any of his contemporaries, George
Papageorge benefited from a breadth and variety of experience, thanks to his
enlightened father, Dr. Constantine Papageorge. He was fortunate to be born
in America, the land of prosperity, and to move in the post-war years, at
the tender age of nine, to Rhodes, where he grew up in a large family with
many children and was initiated in the life of the Church by the late Metropolitan
Spyridon of Rhodes.

Much-travelled and multilingual from adolescence, at
the crossroads of the choice of a future career, he followed the difficult
path which led to the Theological School of Halki, inspired by his father's
vision of seeing him one day a church leader. His postgraduate education in
Germany and Switzerland was extensive, and at an early stage he joined the
ranks of the clergy, thus fulfilling his father's expectations and maintaining
the traditions of his family.

His ministry in Switzerland and Italy, the dynamic role
he played in ecumenical dialogs with other Churches, and the authority of
his academic qualifications brought him, when Iakovos was forced to resign
in 1996, to the archiepiscopal throne of America.

The Premier of Quebec Jean Charest holding The Lonely Path of Integrity

The second part of the book describes the action-filled
three years of Spyridon's ministry in America. Documented with material from
the Archbishop's personal archives and the journalistic records of the time,
it reveals the intricate web of interacting personalities and interests that
led to the eviction of the Ecumenical Patriarchate's former favorite
child.

It emerges from this gripping story of Byzantine intrigue
that the protagonists in the overthrow of Iakovos played precisely the same
repeat role in the ousting of Spyridon. It is revealed that it was not the
Patriarchate that gave way to the pressure of a crisis, but indeed instigated
the stifling situation in America (1996-1999) when it discovered that Spyridon
had no intention to serve its dubious schemes.

The 350 page book illustrated with previously unpublished
photographs from Spyridon's childhood and early Church ministry, traces like
a piece of cinema the pressures and the vilification which he endured as a
human being and an archbishop before being forced to resign in July 1999.

The reader follows unhurriedly the progress of this church
leader to the culmination of his career, as well as the organized efforts
to unseat him. Leading roles in ousting him were played by the so-called "Patriarchal
friends", the emissaries of the Phanar, by a few wealthy Greek Americans,
by the Iakovos establishment, and, in the last phase of the crisis, even by
the Greek Government...

In the mayhem of this merciless persecution, Spyridon
chose solitariness in a foreign country, thus proving that even the uncompromising
find, in the end, a place in the sun.